J' 'smvmmw&xsej " i J.'rt 3.rt r ' v V. . YttJ-v " m& IGVSmh. tfATUfttt&Y, feDIItJAIlY 2;f3 tflc'Taw- r ti 7-.-5Ti-' - ! jy iHijf -Si JV- " fl . Jir -?.; V f l KWT. tc RSf lr, r .. liMfcrtfiMiiirt and mystery M lMlMWbttaM, tfweertai n rose upon nea'es tarve? tbe castle, a dim dls- WMtfAaM lcbt fining upon Its fretted MRHd maft Of faintly glooming steel. m MM Which followed, 111 which the .Cwitw Hikla, Jl'giiljctl ns the traditional 'ulnti nf Dm ITiihr-ni-ellerns. whosenrnTear- "'-M bodes misfortune nnd death te theso '" iwhobtheld It, throws herself across the path ' rlvnl In the hoi of elrivinn her and $ f'ajij Interested In her hy sheer force of tcr- ,. TOT ireni me coeue will irem uenui, unu " 'I MM poetically conceived, and It rurnishcel i"': TRihiM-tnn trilli nn nilmlralile onner- ,.- lenity. A the White Lady, gliding between && Wwtet armed and spectral figures en cither : It ,: . . T... t i- - .k.. , efttoenlicht across tbe fleer, she was ence ftetfotbertpresentaUvo of nil thnt Is most rr.PMQUciil RQil romantic In pbjfilcal beauty. 'n-Ti lA. t m.mm. Al..... 41.1. MM l.A (tllHff tin .(-lilt.. ' ' lUIJ) BWIV UMIU hU1 U9 BUV IJUU Utl HUllW 'sH3 ame above her head, or pointed te the -Sr e.n ok find fainting flgure of her rival ?, whlle she uttered her wnillng traditional 'S-sBrepbecy of wee, her whele personality 5? seemed te be invested with n dramatic ferce '' et which there had been no traee In the long and violent secne with the prince. It was ,jt, as tbeugn sue was in soma soncapnuie ei ci &',R ting herself In action nnd movement. 4'' while In nil the arts of EDCech she was a tncre .tfSViWnde novice. At any rate, there could be A, .jiodeubttnatinims-ouo scene sne reaiizeei r - AI A 1 III4a h' a.a ...I1.'i. t.lnnl iml 5 iBOUliaiAtuuiluiui mu uuwu' f" weu, ...... fie WDetl BOO laueu liuu wiu uai kih- wj uim iue 5 fBoecllght in which she had first nnieared, igf' tee beuse, which nail been breathlessly fiie.ni -aeriiig vue progress ui ujej ui'iieuuiuu, umei ad Kendal heartily joined. w "JEriifslfrJ satd Kendal "Exquisite!" said Kendal in Mrs. Stuart's car, m h steed behind her chair. "She was romanee itself! Ucr acting (heuld always tinsjfcl ' et glorified and pectlcnl pantemine; slsWeuld be inlmltalile se." Mrs. Btuart looked up and smiled ngrcj ment. MYes, that secne lives with one. If every thing clse In the play Is ioer, she ii worth seeing for that nlene. Itcmembcr ill" The llttle warningwas in season, for the peer White Lady had but tee many after oj ej oj pertanities Of blurring the Impression she bad made. In the great situation at the end of the second act, in which the countess has te give, In the presence of tboceuit,a sum mary of the suppose.! story .of the Wblte Lstdy, her passion at ence of leve nnd hatred charges it with a ferce and meaning, which, for the first tlme,(reusc3 the suspicions of the prince as te the reality of the supposed ap parition, la the two or three line and ttraraatle speeches which the situation In volved, the actress showed the tame nbscnee of Jtnowledge and resources as before, the same powerlessncss te create a personality, tbe same lack of all these quicker and mero delicate of perceptions which we include under tbe general term "refinement," and ' which, In the practice of any art, are the out come of long and complex processes et educa tion. There, indeed, was the bald, plain f act the whole explanation of bcr failure as an artist lay in her lack both et the loner and of the higher kinds of education. It was evident that her technical training had lecn of tbe roughest In all technical respects, indeed, her acting had n self taught, pro vincial air, which showed you that she hed natural cleverness, but that her models had been of the poorest type. And in all ether respects, when it came te Interpretation or creation, she was spoiled by her cntire want of that lnhrritance from the past which is the foundation of all geed work in the pres ent. Fer an actress must liae ene of tbe two kinds et Lnonlcdge; she must have either tbe kifbw'edge which comes from n fine tralnlne In ibclf tbe outccme et a lew: K5 . tv . FSi i KW' I..J i.l.. n. tin mii.f !.... '! l'.mmlmlr . MiMUUUU UA DUU4UU3. U.U lllU bUU I) tLMU which comes from tncre living, from the tic tic cumulatiens of personal thought and experi ence. Miss Drelhorten had neither, bbe bad extraordinary beauty and charm, ,nud certainly, as Kendal admitted, some original quickness. He was net inclined te go se far as te call It "power." Hut this quickness, which would hftve been premising in a debu tante less richly endowed en the physical Side, secmcHl te bun te havu no lutui e In her. "It will be checked," he said te himself, "by ber beauty and atrihut flews from It. Hue must uome te depend mere und mera en the physical chann, and en that only. The whole pressure of her success Is and will be that way." Miss Brcthcrten's Inadequacy, indeed, lo le camo mero and mero visible ns the play wau gradually and finely worked up te its climax in tbe last act. In the final tcene of nil, the prince, who, by a scries of accident, has dis covered the Countess Hilda's platu, lies in wairterhcr in the armory, where he has reason te knew the means te try the cITect of a third and last apparition upon the pi luects. Bhe appears; he suddenly coufrehts hir; nml, .dragging her ferwnid, unveils before him'.eif and the primvil the death like features of bis old love, Uecocrlugfreiu the iheck of detection, the countess pours out upon them both a fury of jealous passion, sinking by degrees iute a pathetic, trnuce like in oca eca oca tiea of .the past, uuder the spell of which the prince's auger melts away, and the llttle princess' terror and excikment change Inte eager pity. Thcnwheu the sees him almost recenquered, and'her rival weeping U'slde ber, she takes the poison vial fretnhcr breast, drinks it, amhdJcs in the arms of the man for whose sake the has sacrificed beauty, character and llfe itself. A great ectrees ccAald hanll) have wished for a better opportunity "I ln seene was se obviously beyond Miss lirltherteit's rejjurees that even the cntbudaEt.5 Iieum;, Kendal fancied, cooled down during the progress of it There were signs of restlessness, there was even a little talking insomecf the back rows, and nt notlnie during the scene wa3 there any of that breathless absoiptien in what was jiasslug en the stage which the dramatic materiul itself ninph deserved. "I d jn't thi..k this w ill laa ery leug,"und Kendal iuWalbce'sear. "Tin re is something tragie in n popularity like this; It rests en something unsound, and ene feels that dii- . aster Is net far elT. The whele thing im presses me meat painfully. 8ue has soma capacity, of course, if only the conditions bad been ditrtrcnt-if she 1. .d U-en lern within n limwl i-cul mflt nf i ti. I . Ili ,-..iL1..In . & . telre, if her youth had been passed in it so se f, cietyef mere Intcllectual welht-but, as it is, this very unnlause is ominous, for the ..'. h&utv mtlsl r-n fintn.t m lMti.p n.t.l ,!....-. tj W4 r r7u,' ", -,? '"" "" " V-5 uvuiu vic " - ou retuemljer Dosferc ta in Uj Is tunje tbca Wallace, "What a cult between the right thing and t ife wrong! But come, we must de our duty;" and he drew Kenihil forward to wards the front of the ber, and they saw the t hole house ou its feet, clapjiiug and shout lug, and the curtain Just btlns drawn U - te let the White Lady and the Frlnce npjicr before It. llhe was very fmle, but the iterm of anplause which erected her see med te re- az m fas- Tire bcr, and she swept her smiling glauce ieH- reuml the theatre, uutil at last it rested with tpucM gleam of recognition en the jarty ,ln the box. csiciallv en Ferbc-s. who s & outdelu-r himself lu tuthuilasm. Bhe was F ,i eal ltd forward again and again, until at last g fj tbe heu was coutent, end the centra exit sieu). r Th.) Instant after her white dress lutddis ?:. afpuuvd from the stage a llttle jtige luy t". knnckalat the deer of the box withames- V'lVt"" fetberten t tin I'jb. l(M(i. -eji nef."" Out they all trooped alenjt a Barrow "passage and up a'shert staircase, nntiTa rough temporary deer was thrown open, and they found themselves in the wings, tbe great stage, en which the scenery was being hastily rhif ted, lying te their right. The lights w ere being put out; only n few gas jets were left burning round a pillar, beslde which steed Isabel Drcthcrten, her long phantom dress lying In whlte folds about her, her undo and unt and her manager standing near. Every detail et tbe picture the spot of brilliant light bounded en nil sides by dim, far reach ing vistas of shadow, the figures hurrying across the back of the stage, the moving ghest-like workmen all around, nnd In the midst that whlte heeded, languid flgure re vlvcd in Kendal's memory wbenever in after days his thoughts went wandering back te the first mement of real contact lictween his own personality and that et Isabel Drcth Drcth creon. CHAPTEn IV. A few days after the performance of the "Whlte Lady," Kendal, In the ceurse of ha weekly letter te his Bister, sent her n fairly detailed account of the evening, including the Interview with her after the play, which had left two or three very marked Impres sions upon him. "I wish," he wrote, "I could only convey te you n ncnse of her per sonal charm such as might baLince the im pression of her artistic defects, whtch I sup sup pese this account of mlne cannot but lenve en jeu. When I came away thnt night after our con creation with bcr I had en tirely forgotten her failure as an actress, and it is only later, slnce I have thought ever the evening In detail, that I hne re turned te my first standpoint of wonder nt the cesy toleration of the English public When you are actually with her, talking te her, looking nt her, Ferbes' attitude is the nnttt iintvllilA nml rp.isnnnble ene. Whnt j does art, or cultivation, or training matter J I found myself saying, as I walked home, in echo of blm se long as nature will only condescend ence in n hundred years te pro pre pro ducefortu n creature se ierfect,se finely fashioned te all Uuutlful usesl Let ether licople go through the tell te acquire; their dim is truth: but here is beauty in Its quin tessence, and what Is beauty but tlnee parts eftruthl Iknuty Is hni'meny with the uni versal order, n revolatieu of laws nnd infec tions of which, In our common groping through a dull world, we llnd in general nethiug te remind us. And, if se, what felly te ask of a human creature that It should be mero than bcautlfull It is n messenger from tho'geds, nnd we treat it ns if it were any common traveler along the highway of life, and cross-cxamlne It for Its credentials in-t-tcad of raising our nltnr and sacrlllcing te it with grateful hearts. - "That was my latest Impression of Friday night. Hut, naturally, by Haturdny morn ing I bad returned te the rational point of leiv. The mind's morning climnte is re moved by many degrees from thnt of the evening; and the ciiticnl revolt which thfi whele epectacle of the 'WlJte Lady' had originally reused In me revived In nil Its foiee. 1 liegen, Indeed, te feel 03 if 1 and humanity," with its long, laborious tradition, were en ene side, holding our enn against n young nnd arrogant nggrcsser namely, benuty, In the person of Miss Urcthcrten. Hew many men and women, I thought, ha ve labored utid struggled and died lu the effort te reach n higher and higher j'crfec j'crfec tieu lu ene slugle art, and are they te be out eut out deno, eclipsed jin n moment, by something which is n mere freak of nature: something which, hke the lilies of the field, liiu neither toiled nor spun, and yet claims thesieclal inheritance and reward et tbesa nbebavel It seemed te me ns though my feeling In her proscuce of the night U'fore, as if the sudden overthrew of the critical resistniiee in me, had been n kind of treachery te the hnnnii caum lleauty has power enough, I found myself reflecting with some fierceness let us withheld from herasnny and n prerogative which lire net rightly hers; let us defend ngalntt her that store of human sympathy which is the proper reward, net et her facile and heaven born infections, but of labor nnd lutolllgence of all that is complex and tenacious in the workings et the human spirit. "And then, ns my mood cooled still fur ther, I began te recall many nn evcnlng at the FraucaWa with you, and ene part after another, one actor after another, recurred te me, till, ns I realized afresh whnt drnmatie intelligence and dramatic training really ere, I fell Inte an angry contempt for our lavish English enthusiasms. 1'oergiill it is net her fault if she Iwlluves herself te be n great nctrcss. Hi ought up under mis leading conditions, nnd w ltheut nn but the meht elementary oducntlen, hew is bhe te Knew what the real thing means! lilie finds herself the ragu within a few weeks of her nppcarnnce In the greatest city In the world. Naturally she paj'B no heed te licr critics why would she I "And she is indeed a most perplexing mix ture. De what I will, I cannot hnrmoulze nil my ililTereut Impressions of her. Let me begin ngsin. Why is it that her acting Is se IKXir? 1 never saw a mere drmualle Jier Jier seiialltyl Everything that she sa) a or does is raid ordeno nithu wrath, n foiee, n viva i ity that makes her smallest gesture nnd her lightest toue Impress thuinsilw-s upon you. I felt this ery strongly two or three times after the piny en Friday night-In her talk with Feri, for instunce, whom she has oltegethir in her toils, uud whom she pluys with as though he weie the gray headed Merlin niidshe nil innocent Vivien weaving I harmless s;ells libeut him. And then, from this mocking wnref w erds nnd leeks, this gay cainarnderle, in which there was net a scrap of coquetry or self conscieflsiK'Sg, the would inss into n tudileu euthuist of nnger as te the iiii'icrtiiiuucu nf English ilch people, the im im licitluciire et lich millionaires who bne tried onceortwico te 'elder' her for their evening patties ns they would erdir their Ices, or the iin-.rtlnenoe of the young 46will about town' who thinks she has nothing te de behind the scenes but receive his visits mid provide him with ciitvrtuliimenc And, as thu irnick, ImjH-tueiu words rnme rushing out, jeu felt that hire for uueu was a woman tjieukiug Iht ie.it mind te you. nud that with n Hashing eje and curving lip, nn iuluni graeM and rutrg)' which made iverj verl meiuonible. If the would but leek lll.e that or speak like that uu the stage! Hut Hare, of ceurse, is the nib. The w liole dillleulty of art consist in losing jour own jierseuulity, be te speak, and finding it ugaili tnintferiiied, nnd it Is a dillleulty which MI18 Hutherteu has never even understoel. "After the Impression of spontaneity nud natural force, I think what sttuclc me ineit was the phj sical elfeet Ijundeu has already exercised upon her lu six vii-eks. Bhe leeks suiierbly sound and healthy; she is tall and fully develejuxl, nnd her color, for nil us delicacy, is pure nnd glow lug. Hut, after nil, she was born in a languid, tropical climate, nud it Is the net veu ttrtiln, the rush, the in cisbant occupation of Louden w hieh seem te be telling ujien her. Khe gave 1110 two ur three tiuiesu jialnful impression of futlgui en Friday fatigue nud something like di di pressieu. After twenty minutes' talk she threw herself lack ngainst the iron pillar be hind her, her Wlute I.adj's heed flaming a face se jiole aud drooping that we all get up te go, feeling tint It vr.is cruelty te levp lur uji a iniuute leiigvr. Mitj. Stuart asked her alwut her tiuudaj s and vi hether the ev er get out cf town. 'Oh, ihe said, with n sigh and uloekut her untie, who was standing near, 'I think Bunchy isthe hardust day of nil. It is our "at home" day. and such crowd coma 1 just te leek nt me, 1 6upiose, for 1 cannot lam w n quarter 01 tliem.' bcreujieii Mr. Wemill suid lu Ids blaml eemmeieinl way that society had iU buidens ns well as its pleasures, and that his dear uicce could liardly encapu her social duties alter the flat tering manner in which Londeu h.ul wel comed ber. Miss Urctherten nnswerwl, with a sort of languid rebellion, tliut her social dhtles would seen be the death of her. Hut evidently she Is very docile at home, and they de what they like with her. It seems te me that the undo and uuut nrouge.l dual ihiewder than the Londen publle; it is berne in ujwn me by various indications that they knew exactly what their niece's popularity depend! ou, nud that It v ery possibly may net be a leug lived One. Accordingly they lave determined en two things: first, that she shall make as much monevfor the famili al ecu by any menus be made, and, secondly, that she shall Hud her way into Londen sed-t-ty nnd secure if jiossible a great parti before the enthusiasm for her has had time te chill. One hears various stories of the uuele, all in this seiisu; I cannot say hew true they are. "However, the ujishet of the supper party w as thnt next day Wallace, Ferbes and 1 met 1 at Mrs. tStuart's houie cud formed a Sunday iiaaTuu ret'tM newtuni of mom smMrSM from ber family; in ether words, we mean te ecure that she has occasional rest and coun try air en Sunday her only free day. Mra. Btuart has already wrung out of Mrs. Wor Wer rall, by a little judicious scaring, crmisslen te carry bcr off for two Sundays ene this month and ene next and Miss Brcthcrten's romantic side, which is curiously strengfln ber, bes been touched by the suggestion that the second Sunday shall be spent at Oxford. "Frebably for the first Sunday a week lieuce we shall go te Surrey. Yeu remem ber Hugh Farnham's property near Lelta 2 1 ill r I knew all the farms about there from old sheeting days, and tlure Is oue en the edge et some great corameu which would be perfection en n May Sundaj-, I will write you a full account of our daj. TI10 only rule laid down by the laague is that things are te be se managed that Miss Bretherton Is te have no osslble excuse for fatigue se long as she Is In tbe hands of the so:iety. "My book gees en fairly well. I have been making a I0U3 study of DoMusset, with thn t csult that the poems seem te me far finer than I had remembered, mil the 'Confessions d'un Enfant du Slccle' a mlsernble per formance. Hew wns it it Impressed me se much when I read It first! His jxiems have reminded me of jeu nt every step. De j-eu remember hew you used te rend them nleud te our mother nud me nfter dinner, whlle the father had his sleep before going down te the heuscP Ten daj-s later Kendal spent n long Monday evening in writing the following letter te his slsteri "Our yesterdnj's expedition wns, I think, n preat success. Mrs. Stuart v.111 happj, lic lic calise she bad for unce Induced Stuart te put away his paxTBmnl allow himself nhelhlny; it wns Miss Brcthcrten's first sight of the genuine English country, ami t-lie was like n child nmeiig the get nud the hawthorns, whlle Wallace nml 1 nmuseel our lunuly selves extremely well in licfricndiug the most beau tiful woman lu the British isles, in drawing her out and wnUhlnghcr strong natve Im pressions of things. Stuart, I think, was net qulte bappj. It is hardlj- te lie expected of n lawyer lu the crisis of his fortunes that ha bheuld enjoy ten hours' divorce from hla briefs; but he did hlj U-st te reach the com mon .level, nnd his wife, who Is devoted te him, nnd might ns well net be married nt all, from thopeiutot vlowef marital companion ship, ev Ideutlj' thought lilm )ierfi'ctlen. The day mere than cenflrmed my liking for Mrs. Stuart; there nre certain llttle follies about ber; she Is loe apt te regard everj" distin guished dinner party bhe nndHtunit attend ns nn event of enormous nud universal Inter est, nnd licj'end Inden secictj- her sj-m-pa'.hies linrdly reach, except lu Hint vngue chnrltahle form vihlch Is rnther pity nnd toleration thaiisympathj'. ButsheH lilndly, wemnulj, seft: she has no small jealousies nnd nene of that injtty self consciousness which mnl.es se many women wearisome te Uiegirnt majeritj of plain men, who have 110 wish te tal.etlicir social exercises tee much nu serleiix. "I wns curious te seu what sort of n ivla ivla tleushlp she nud Miss Brethcrteii had dove deve dove epid tewant each ether. Mrs. Stuart is nothing if net cultivated; her light individ uality floats casllj' em the stream of Londen thought, new with this current, new with that, but nlwaj-s In movement, never left be hind. She liim the usual llteinry and artistic topics nt her Angers' end, and se she knows every IrkIj. Whenever tin mere "nbstrnct bides of a subject ln-gln te bore her, she can fall back upon nn endless store of gossip as llvelj-, ns brightly colored, nnd, en the whele, ns I1.11 mlesNiis she liceelf U. Miss Brethcrteii had till a week or two nge but two subjects Jnmalc.i nnd the stage the latter taken In n somewhat narrow sense. New she has nddtsl te hir More i,f knew leilge n great number of first Impressions of lmileii notorieties, which naturally threw her mind nnd Mrs. Sluart'n mere frequentlj Inte contact with each ether. But I bee that, nfter nil, Mrs. Stuart hml no need of nny bridges of this kind te bring Ik r en te common ground with Isabel Bretheiteu. Iler strong womanliness nnd the leuvcti of warm licirti-d jeuth still stirring lu her would be qulte enough et themselves, nud besides, there is n rritienl de light in the girl's beauty und the llttle per sonal pride nnd excitement she undoubtedly feels nt having, In be cicditnbla nnd natural 11 manner, secured n I10U en the most inter esting jicrsen of the season. It is curious te see her fergettius her enn sjiecinltlcii 111T1I neglecting te make her own points that she may bring her roni'Kimeu ferwnrd nml set her lu the beet light. Mli llietliel ten takes her homage very piettily, it iMiutuml te her te be made much of, und blie (I v-. net rcfuse It, but she in her till 11 ei,K M mliiui'e:! enormously her friend's beeial eaiuhilitle-s and clcvn ni'ss, and she is iinpulsively mgir te make buiiiu ivtum for Mi-k rtiuuil's kind ness 1111 eagerness which show 1 it .elf lu the greatest complaisance! toward ull the Stuaits' frieuds, nnd in n constant unti hiiilueis for unj thing which will please nnd II .iter them. "However, here 1 11111 ns usual misting tlme in iiualjsis instead et describing te jeu eurSuuilay. Itvwisone of theie lie'avenlj' dajs with which May btmtliM in out of our winteT pessiuiLui, sky mill e-aith seemed te Ikj nliku clothed in u j euiug Iridescent luMiitj". We found u carriage nn ting for us nt the btatien, nnd we drevu nleiig a gicat main reael until 11 sudden turn landed us 111 n greiOli track tiuvciimig a laud of endless coin cein coin iiiens, us wilil und ns forsaken of hiiniau kind ns though it were a region hi bonie virgin continent. Ou either haml the gerse was thick ami golden; great euks, splendid in the first dazzling sh-irpiivss of their spring gnx'ii, threw vast shadows ever the fuh moist grass lnqieath, nud ever the lambs sUvping Usiele their lleecj' mothers, whlle the haw thorns ro-e iute the bky In masses of rese tinted Mievv, cuch tree n bhlulng mirnclent whlte bet In the environing blue). "Then came the farm heuse eild, ih1 brick, red tiled, cnseinctitcd every thing thnt the lusthetlc soul dealres the farmer and his wife looking out for us, nud n pleasant, homely me.il ivndy In tlie parlor, with its la t century woodwork. I M I 1 jiffeuant, homely tntal. "l'erbes was greatly in Ins element nt lunch. 1 nev er knew him mom 1 .icy ; he gnv e I us biographies, mostly imagiiurj, illustrated j by sketches, made In the intervals of eating, j of the sitters vvluw) jwrtrmts he has con , desevudeel te tske this jear. Tlny rnnge j from a blsliep ami 11 le'-.iltj dnwn te a llttle girl picked up in the IJii.luti ureeu. and his I iiroseutatien of the chnracuristic uttltmles I of each these uttitudes wlue-li, aeverdiug te i him, Ik tray the 'inner uml nf the bishop or I the foundling was iidimiuble Theu he fell upon the academy that uspcvtcil budy of I whiehlbupiK)vihowillbi)eiiboth. president 1 nnel tore It limb from limb. Wie.i what fuce 1 I shall ever bit nt the same talilu with bun at iui iie.-uui.uj- uniuers 01 tne lutuie supjKM iug fortuue ever exalts me ugaiu us she did this j ear te thnt august 1ue.1l 1 hardly knew. Mlllals' faces, l'ettie's knights or Caldereu's beuutiesi- ull fared the sauic. Yeu could net say it was ill nntuivd; it was simply the bare trutli of things put in the whimsical manner which is nutural te Ferbes. "Miss Brethcrteii listened te and laughed nt It all, finding her way through the creud of unfamiliar iimnes nml allusions w ith n wo we mau's cleverness, loekiug ndorable all the time in a cloak et some brown velvet stutf, uud a large hat ulse of bruwii velvet She has a beautiful hand, ilue unel delicate, net tiwclally small, but full of cLuraeUr, it was pleasant te wate.li it playing with hereruuge, or.sinpethJBg bacl every 'uqw nud thcu the si! -Li. JV-f'JI rscnotieciBi which wi-ray, et) she will, beyond the boundaries assigned te them. Presently Wallace wns ill advised enough te ash her which pictures she hed like the best nt the I'rivate Vieir; she re- iilled by picking out n ball room scene at 'erth's and an unuttcrnble mawklih thing of Ilalferd's a troubadour In n pink dressing gown, gracefully intertwined with violet scarfs, singing te n party of robust j-eung woman In e 'light which never was en sen or land.' Yeu could count all the figures lullie first,' she said, 'it wai te lifelike; e real;' and then Hal ford was romantic, tb picture was pretty, and the liked It. 1 looked nt Ferlics with soineninusemeut;it was grati fying, remembering the rodomontade with which "tVnllace and I had been crushed en the night of the 'Whlte Iady te sce him wiuca under Miss Brcthcrten's lilting of the worst art in England I Is the critical spirit worth something, or is It superfluous in the atrical matters nnd only indhpcnsahle in matters of painting I think he caught the challenge, lu inj cye, for he evidently felt himself in some, llttle dlfllculty. " 'Oh, j-eii couldn't, be said, with n groan, 'you couldn't like that ball room and that troubadour, heaven forglve usl Well, there must be something In it there must be some thing lu It, If it really gives you pleasure I darn say there Is; wo're se confoundedly up pish in the way we leek at things. If cither of them had a partlcle et drawing or a scrap of tastu, If Iwtli etthem weren't as liare ei n broomstick of the least vestige of gift, or nny suspicion of knowledge, there might !e a geed ileal te say for them I Only, my dear Miss Brethcrteii, you see it's really net a mat ter of opinion; I assure you it Isn't I could preve te you as plain as two and two make four, that Ilalferd's figures don't join In the mlddle, and thnt Ferth's men and wjemen are as flat as my hand there isn't a back among tlieml And then tbetaste, and thocelor, and the claptrap Idiocy of the scntimentl Ke, I don't think I can stand It. I nmnll forpeeplo Retting enjoyment where they can,' with n defiant leek nt me, 'and Biinpplng their fin gers nt the critics. But ene must draw the line semen here. Thcro'ssemo art that's out of court from the beginning.1 "I couldn't resist It. '"Don't listen te him. Miss Brethcrteii' I cried. 'If I were you 1 wouldn't let him spoil your pleasure. The great thing is te feci; dcfenil your feeling against himl It's worth mero than this criticism.' I "Ferbes' eyes looked laughing daggers nt me from under his shaggj' whlte brews. Mrs. Btuai t nnd Wullace kept their countenances te perfection; but 1 had him; there's no denying It. ' " 'Oil, I knew nothing about it,1 said Isabel Brclhtrten, divinely unconscious of the llttle skirmish going en around her. 'Yeu must teach me, Mr. Ferlxs. I only knew what touches me, what I like that's all I knew In anything.' ' " 'It's all we nny of U3 knew,' mM Wal lace, nlrllj'. 'We begin with "1 like" nnd "I don't like," then we begln te lw proud and make distinctions nud llnd reasons; but the thing lients us, and we ceme back in the end te "I like" nnd "I don't like." ' 1 "The lunch ever, we strolled out nleng the common, through heather which ns yet was a mere brew 11 cxpansoef flewcrles3 uuder uuder grewth nnd cejies which overhead were a canopy of golden oak leaf nnd carpeted underneath with primroses and the young upcurllng bracken. Fiescntly through n llttle weed we came upon 11 pond lying wlda nud blue before us under the broezj'Mny skj-, its shores fiiugcdwith scented flr weed nnd the whele nlralive with birds. Wosatdewn tinder a plle of legs fresh cut nnd fragrant and talked away vigoreuslj-. It was n llttle lUincult often te keep the conversation en lines which dlel net oxclude Miss Brethcrteii. Ferbes, Iho Stuarts, Wallace nnd 1 ure accus tomed te be together, nud ene never realizes what n Frcemasenrj' the Interceurse even of n capital la uutil ene tries te introeluce an outsider Inte it. We talked U10 theatre, bf ceurse; the wnju of dilTcrcnt ncters, the for tunes of managers. Isabel Bretherton nat urally has ns yet seen very llttle; her com ments were mainly personal mulnll of a fricndlj enthusiastic kind, for 'the pro fession has been very cordial te her. A month or flve weeks mere nud her eugngctneut nt the CaHle.K) will be ever. There nre ether theatres open teher, of course, nml nil the managers ure at her feet; but bhe has set her heart upon going ubreid for seme time, and has, I imagine, made ee much meney this season that the family cannot In decency object te her having her own waj 'I am wild te get te Italy,' she said te 1110 lu her emphatic, im petuous way. 'Sir WnlUr Iluthcrferd lias Inlked te ine se much alwut It that I am bc bc bc giunlngtodruanief It. Heng tohaveelono with Londen nud boeiTI This English sun seems te me be chilly,' nnd she drew her win ter cloak about her with a llttle shiver, al though theday was really nn English bummer day, nnd Mrs. Stuart was lu cotton. 'I came from such warmth, and I leveel It. I have Wjii making nequaiutance with all sorts et horrors slnce I came te Londen face nchqhnd rheumatism and colds I scarcely knew there were cuch things in the world And I never knew what it was te be tired before. Homo Home Heme times I can liardly drag through my work. I lintoilse; it makes uie cress like n naughty child I' J " 'De you knew,' I said, flinging mj-sclf dew 11 lie-side her ou the grass nud looking up nt her, 'that It's nltegether wrong? Nature) uevtr meant j-eu te feel tired; It's inon inen inon btreus, it's against thu natural order of things.' " 'It's Londen, bhe said with her llttle sigh nnd the drooping lid that Is se prcttllj pathetic 'I have the rear in my earsnll day, und it eeems te lx humming through mj bleep nt night. And then the crowd, and the hurry jieople ure in, and thev-qulckness nud shaipnessef thlngsl But 1 have only n few weeks mere,' she nddcel, brightening, 'and then by October I shall Ik mera used te Europe the cllmate nud the life.' "I nm much impressed, nnd se is Mrs. Btunit, by the stmggle her nerreus strength is m iking ugnlust Londen.. All my nurs ing of j-eu, Marie', and of your mother has taught 1110 te nqtice they) things In women, nnd I llnd myself taking often a very physical uud medical vle.v et Miss Brethcr Brethcr eoii. Yeu see, it is n case of n northern teni lierument nud constitution relaxed by tropi cal conditions, and then exposed ence mera In nu exceptional degree te the strain nud btrcisef nerthernlife, 1 ragewhen I think et such a pluce et phj-sical escellence marred and dlnuucd by our harsh English struggle. And nil for what Fer n commonplace, mike beliove nit, vulgarizing in the leiigruu both te the artist nnd the publiel There is nsense of tragic waste nbeut it, Suppese Ixmden de.-trej-s licr health there are seme ilgus of It what n futile, ironical pathos there would le in it 1 long te step in, te 'h.ivent Bomeliody, te step it. "A little Incident later en threw a curious light Ueii her. We had moved en te the ether side et the pond und were basking in the tlr weed. The afternoon suu wasblant Jug through the branches en te the besom of the pond; a splendid Scotch flr just boside us tesseel out its red Imibed brnuches ever u great lied of green reeds, starred here nnd there with yellow Irises. The w 0111.111 from the keeper's cettage near had brought us out seme tea, und most of us had fallen Inte a sjbaritle framoef mind in which talk seemed te be n burden en the blleuce and easeful tieace of the sceue. Suddenlj- Wallace uud Feibes fell upeu the question et Balzac, of whom Wallace has been making a btudy lately, and were seen landed lu u discussion of Balzac's method of character drawing. Are Eugene de Hastlgnac, Le l'cre Oorlet uud old Urandetre.il beings or mere lucar lucar natiens of qualities, mathematical deductions from 11 giv en point At last I was drawn lu, nud theStuaits: Stuurt has trained his w ife in Balzac, nnd she has 11 dry, original way et judging 11 novel, which Is stimulating nnd keep the ball rolling. It was the first time that the talk lead net centered in oue way or another around Miss Bretheiteu, who, of course, was the first consideration through out the day In all our minds. We grew vo ve hemeutnud forgetful till at last n little movo mevo move meiituf hers diverted the general current Bhe had taken etT her hat and was lcanlug back ug.IiM the oak uuder which she sat, watcblug with parted lips und a gaze cf the purest delight ami vv uuder the movemeuts of u nut hatch evci head, a creature of the weed- Jiecker kiud, nita delicate purple gray luiuage, who was tapping the branch abeve erfer insects with Lisl.irim illsnmtvirtinnnfn hi bill, und thenskiiummg along te a land bauk a llttle dutance off, where he disaiipeared wit1- his ntv 1. . j . . . . (t'enttuutd cut Satutdsy.) IAIKE'8 OKLKKY COMPOUND. ANYONE CAN DYE DIAMOND DTKS. ADII.sa.UUAOOAT.1 y fj ret XCM CMKTt, lAUNS.UAUS, Ac. tta In many ether ways HAVE Mentr, ana n.mke tilings leek like M W, by nstnsT VIA il0 efKS. The work Is easy, almpia, titilck 1 ihs colors the ltesi and raauit known. Atkler Iiiauiena UjreianataJtenoetber. rcrOllrtlngorlli-enilns; raney Article UBK DIAMOND PAINTS, (old, gllver, llrensa, Cepper. Only 10 Cents. Baby Portraits. A 1'oruellont l.enutlf.il biby pictures from i lie. printed en linn ptnte psper by natant Chotu ptneeis, sunt tree te Motheret any Uabr prn within a year. ry Mether wants these plcluri'si icna at onee, Ulve Baby'a same nndsge. WKbLs, uicHAunaan aoe- Unrllnajten. ve. H( OW TO HAVK LIKE. .t!!.hat e;""i,lT u ItanlrrlUtloneftlai threat and litns. What causes It t Ceatet I en. Btnn the ennrritlen, the I'rltallen nates 1 and tbe cough U cured. Jtnt hew te sep tbe congestion r Ah, there U utt where pbysletant hive always been pnzxltd. Bnt It w list be checked, or pneumonia, qulek con cen con nmptien er tome terrlble pulmonary treubln w 111 fellow. Borao doctor glre cod flrer oil. Mhert eeugh tyrnpt, but the most advanced 1 reteribe stimulant. Mature mtuf be as as ttted. Fura whiskey wUl de It. Bee what phytlelani say : I'ref Anittnrimt.ef llelleTiie (Rew fork), 'Pllfge, ssts "The Judicious use of alee hello HtlmnianU Is one or tbe sulking eharae trusties of progress in the practice of aedl cine during Iho last hlf ecntnry." .. ''fefettnr Henry a. Mott.er New Yerk, tay s: "Tbe purity el UuUy'a I'me Malt Whisky (at flmpie analytical tett will readUy oenTlneo a I hyslelan or an expert) should certainly roc 1 nunnnrt It te thn highest pablle favor." Untry'tfure Malt Whisky la a certaln cure jnd preventive, of congestion and should bi I opt In every fstnllv. ft It anld by all drag-, el ti ana dealers. He sure and tecure the gen uine. (S) s, B,Oi P. H. IamtattsBed thst rancor It hereditary In my family My father died of It, a titter el 'Aiy mother file. let it, and my own titter dlel 01 It y toelings may be Imagined Ibea when the bnrrlbie dlsniun msile in appear nncn en my sine. It wns a malignant Can cer, uitlng Inwardly in tucli a way that It could 1 nt be cnt out- Nuinureus remedies were nfeel for tt, bnt the Cancargrnwtteadtly worn until It Boomed thvt I waa deemed-to fellow ihe ethers of the family. 1 took Hwlft'aBpeel flc. which, fr.ttn the nrst day, forced out the poison and continued Its life until 1 had taken revural bottles, when I found myself well. J k new thst B. e. 0. cured me. MHS. 8. M.1D0L, WiNSTOir, N. c., Wet. se, 'g$. fend for Becken Canceratid Weel Diseases. Tub bwirr eracirie Ce., Drawers, Atlanta, Oa- Tu.Tha(S) YER'H P1I.L8. "Try Ayer's Pills." Ker Itheumatlsm, Neuralgia and Gout. Stephon l.auslng, of Yenkers, H. Y., says: ' Uocemmondod ai a euro for chronle Cos Ces Cos tlyenoss, Ayur's I'llis have relieved me from that trouble and ulse from tlOUT. It every victim of this dlsnusn would heed. only these words nf mlne, 1 could bnulsh Gout irem the ind. Thcse words would be-' Try Ayer's 1'llls.'" " Hy the iise of Vynr'a I'llis nlene, 1 cured myself. permanently of Hbenmatlsm, which bad treuhlun inn several months. Tbese Pills nre nt encii harmless and effectual, and, I bo be bo licve, would preve a specific in all cases et Incipient RHEUMATISM. Ne medlclnu could havoserved me In better Htead." u. C. ileck, Cerner, Avoyelles Par ish, i-e. C. r. Hepkins. Nevada Clly, wrltes: "1 have nsed Ayer's I'llis ter sixteen years, and 1 think they are the best l'lll in the world. VV e keen a box et thorn In the heuse all thn tlme. They have cured 1110 of tick headache Mid neurufgla, Hlnce taking Ayer'a fills, 1 liave been free trem these complaints." 1 ,have derived great bone lit from Ayer's Pills, flve yearn age 1 waa taken te 111 with iheiimatlsm tbatl was unable te de any work 1 tonic three boxes or Ayer'a Pills and was en tirely cured, flnce that time lam never with out u. box or theso pills." l'eter Chrltlenten Sherwood, Wis. Ayer's Cathartic Pills mirAxiD it l r. J. O. Ayer At Oe., Lewoll, Maaa, Pelil 'liy ull Dealers In Mcdlclne, feblOtea gOUKN'Clv'.S MANDKAKK lMLLS. DR. S0HEN0K.'3 MANDRAKE PILLS Are tlin tnftst, surest and speediest vogeuilile niniiKjy in tbe world for nil DiDeiuius et the Btemacb A Liver. BECAUSE They clean Iho linings of Ptemnch and bowels lleducH ceiiusistlna In sll tbe bowels, ileal lii'ltatHlHndexeited-partt, I'rometo heulthy nmlnniiud sweet secretions, Correct thn lilie anil cum biliousness, Make pure lilcel anil give It free Hew, 'l but send nuiilinent te every part Dn net full te semi for Dr. Bohenck'tnew nnd ailinlndile trnailse en thn Lungs, the Liver, uud tln Hleumcli, with tbelr disease und euro. It abounds In excellent Informa tion, nnel will Kl-oyeu ldnas about these vital nri;ius and thu laws el heal th you never had beieiu. heittfreie. Dr. tfchenck's MedioIneB. PULMONIC 8VUUP, HifAWKKI) TONIO, MANDUAKK PILLS P'.TKKLY VKUKTAUI.K, re for hale bv lirugglfts. Knll prlnted dlroo dlreo dlroe tt ins wllb en;cli packue. Address all commu nications le in. J. II. Uclienck A Sen. 1'lilln di'lphln, 1'a. maylMydAw TlLMmitlSYH' Hl'KOlFlCa. HDMPHRBYS' Ha. lliiMi-iiHiivs' HrtaincH are scientifically and enreliilly jirepsie.l prescriptions! used ler man v join In pi-ivnt-i pncllce wlthsuc reft, nnd lur ever thirty veaig used lv tb 1 people. Kvery slngle SpeiciUc Is ti Hpecl cunt ler Hits ill-own nauitil Tliesn HrHx-ltle- euro without drugging, rurgliiir or rtertuclng thn yslem. nnd welii Hct and deed thu bevKimuiN UsusuiEaet-Tiis Would. 1 Isitif I'rlnrlpal Net. Cures. Price. 1. Kuvkrh, itiiigestlen. In flam mil Ions iv 2. Weums, Werm Kevor, Werm Celic 25 x. Chyims Colie. erTeethlug of Infants.... 'A 4. liunMict.et Children or Adults S3 t, DvstKTiiKV, Griping, llllteus Colle IS 11. C110LXHI il eiiBtis, Vetulllng 3S 7. Cevens, Coin h, Jimnehltls ' K. NuuHALiiu,TiMitbschVi Kiiceache.........V5 i). lUADiuHn, Hick IlKidache. Vertigo t 10. Dvsi'Ki'giA.ltllleut Ueiuach 'i. 11. 8uri-HKanu or 1'aimtul I'aHiens '25 li Wiiitks, tee rieliiMi l'erltas 'St 13. Choup, Cough, Dllllrult Ureathmg.. II. Ssi.t KiiaiiM, Krysliwlas, Kriiptlnng 'JS 15. UUHBMAT13M, llheuiuatlc I'alus it. vkk au Anus, Chills, XI ai aria ....Ml 17. 1'il3. Ullnd or ultwdlng M l'l. Catakhh, lnnunnza, Celd In the llttad....W 90. VVBoeriNn Cecuii. VlolenlCeuzbs 60 'il. OaxKRAt. Dssilitv, Tbyslcal Weakness. .60 '.7. KlUNKV nifiKlB W '. NhuVOUS IlkBILlTV 1 OU W. UniNAHV VVHAkMrss, WolUuglled 60 3.- UlMKASKHOVTHHltltAKT, Palpitation. ...II Ul Beld by druggists, or nt postpaid en ie celpt et prlcn. Uu. IHiMruRtvs' Mahual, Ull iwges) richly bound In cloth and rgeld, untiled free. IIUMl'llUKY.V MKUICINK UUIUU mi-tOuBt-. N. V. SPB0IFI03. Tn.'!h.KAvTtS) lTNOKrKI.OIKI) PAIU'S ill ihe Huwan lledy Knlarcd. Dnvelrp'd, biieiiglbiiiied, ete , Is anlntoiostlnBalvdrilsu anlnteiostlnBalvdrilsu anlntoiestlnBalvdrilsu meut leug run In nurpapnr In mply te in. ciulrlOM we will Buy thai ibure Is no evidence of bnmliiig about ihu On the ceuuary, thu aelvi iitsuisi ure very hlghlv ludnrsea. Intur esietl pen-nn may get suiled clreulars giving all particulars, by uiltlug lotheKUlK JIKDi l!li e. 5 avian rl, llutrale, N. Y. O0UU0 Daily lite. flllydAw rpKKTUINU rsVltUl TO MOTHERS. Kvery bulm should have u bettle of DU. KAHUNhY'TKtTlllNl hVuUI'. 1'erlenliy tutej. Ne opium or Merphia mixtures. Will lellofe I'elle, lirlplna lu tee llewels and Pro Pre Pro ueio Ulllicult Teething. Prepared by UKS. i. rAIIKNKY A.sov,llugemtown.Ma. Druir kltti sail It 1 S cents. Trial bottle lent by mall 10 cents. Janl-lydeedw Cleanse the System DO IT NOW Wllb that most reliable saeaU ctae PaltM'a celery Uotnpenn. ltpurtflratha bleed, caret Coa Cea tUpaUmi, anarritDlat tthellv-ir ana ktdsera. effectually eloans eleans Ins; thtsytuta of bll watt and dead Batters. Paine's Oelery Gompennd remblnet trne nerve Innla ana ttrentrtalng (.usllilcs. reviving thAenertet and spirits " 1 hrs been troubled for sense year with a complication et atfflenlttaa After tryleg vs 1 lout remedies, and net flndlat; relief, 1 tried ralee'e celery Compound. Before tak Ititf one full tMttla tee len- tronbleteme tymp t me Tnetan te anbtlde. and I eaa mly tay new. iht I reel like a sew man. Di.ro.Uen hsslmprered.andlaave gained ten pint In weight tinea 1 hire ceiumenced taklp the Compenna." UOMBSTOBSTTCAUNS, ftlchTtlJe, VL H.0O. BUforteOO. At Druggists. Wills, Ktcnstosea Ce , Butllngten, Tt. TMVHKH Vn-HOtiK8ALK KRDUCT10N. CHAS. I BABERBUSII, (Sot(sier H.HibirbiUu I Seb.) Wholesale Seduction. Te enable us te make room for our new gee Is we are offering apedal ilnrgalnt In FUR ROBES, PL.UBH -A.P ROBEH, B-KIQIIBKL-LS, JKUK atiOVBS, In fact, our Xntlre Wln'.er Bleck. TjDIES' FO0KETB0OKS, (JA.RD OA8KH, PUU tCH AND BELTH AT COST. Ne trouble te chew our goods at Chas. E. Haterbush's SADDLE, HABNES8, AMD TRUNK STORE. Ne. 30 Centre Squfu-e, AN0A8TBB.Va. arsign or ihe Gelden llnne Heads "Sm HHATINU. F LINN it BKENKMAN'H UKLKUUATKD OLD STYLE IS THE BEST IflT-BUA-KKT. UAUUA1N3 IM STO V E S -AND Heube Furnishing floods. Lamps & Chandeliers -Prompt Attention te Orders for Plumb InK and lias rittlUK. FL1NN&BSENEHAN, Me. 162 North Queen St., IaANCASTKU. WltiBH A WO JL1QVORB. ,UR OWN BRAND. SPECIAL; -Wft Tt-sTV kpJ&$M& (;OUR OWN BRAND" rOBBaLKiiY H. E. SLAYMAKER, Ne. 20 East Kins Street, LANCA8TKU, l'A. NOT10K TO TREHl'ASSEKS AND U U N H K II. all persons ai e hereby f or bidden te intpasann anye' tbe lands of the Cornwall and spe d srel I rstules lu Lebanon or Lancaster oenntlrs, whethnr I u closed or unln unln clesed, either fcr the perprse et sheeting or nablng, at the law will be rigidly s-n'ereed agalnal all trespassing en said lands of the un dersigned altr this notice Wal. UULKMAN ritKKMAN, li. VKUUY sLUIN, XDW.CrKKKUAN, Attorney for K, W. Celeman't Uelra, Hand-Made Tinware, e I'lJI BvT R i B J ,H B:i 4m m- A JBjM m i;Ba ArmzMB meiBm. SBAROR lUOAMTR i XtH-BAXUMAtfT ,VMaKmli JOIM m"tav?r1fpi.ik' . -" - "s. lie, (SOO. NOBTaWAltD. ?... A.M. . SansH. . r.! a.ra. r.. IM "WUUl fAHf ltM lt L.S0 lie . &M OeTsiw T'' 2-S Utllitiis 1JJ1 Ml Km s.5 in U7 Wll . rri?iai '" Me L0 .U 1 lit ftKr,:v ? i iv. JK5"" 7.W lime r.. a. at via. 7. UsIeaVSV 2-5S T Amn'iV y.te (tie , s.m tja 1J.11 . t. 01 Ub , &.I0 eiimati. :ir7 watiFlts U -. RKhi,iIa?,,?,S2KDMBia niviweN, '."aJaK. '" -A?!L1.tU4S,'na)MPM- f"8.,,"-v" --ll.W. Mi" i-"' M "' 8as .andiai r ftjh?!nr .-M' aw w. na ue p m. rer Lebanon at XUanU 6-3 p bJ. p : KINO 8TEKET (LancasUr.) r2J JtfSdin,t tAS0 m' "-"and s top. m. JS unHSSSS.?.1 7t? m. lK and iuw p ii7 n.m, n4r'TUieat 8v,jeam,andi. LKAV- PB1N0- 8IBBET (Lantttter.) Rl . al1"" 7- w. llRf and i. p tn. IS.I benen tt 7.07am. UMandeWpm P m y"riT VU1 " "" MOMD TBA1NS LBAVK LKBANOlf. 1. m. ',J8yvlile at 7.11 a m and uw and 7 st. SUNDAY TKA1.N9. TBAINB LKAVB HKADIKO. R J6-1.'.1 7S0 a m and 3.10 p m. Fer quarryvllle at 3.10 pm. TBAINS I.KAVM lilliiiifvvii t ITer Lancoster, Ibanen and Ueadlng at 7 la TBAINB 1.KAVJC KINO ST. (Lancaster.) Fer ltfULiVlncr nnt 1.l.aMA mt e nm- . ua- n "i-uAuuu Kb s. in Ann VI Fe'r Quarryyllle at 5.10 p m. TBAINB LKAVK PUINCK BT. (Lanfatter.) 1 ij J. ' ""bt ou BDanen at 8.13 a man Leu p m. rer yuarryvllle at 6.01 p m. TBAINB LRAVK LKIMNON. rer tAncaster at 7.86 a in and 3.45 p m. Fer quarry vllle at 8.45 pm. 1 1 ""nnecUen at.cplnmbla, MarietU Jnnc Jnnc tlen, Lancaster Juactlen, Manhelm. Beading and Lebanon, tee time table at all stations. A. M. W1L8UN Buperlntendent ENNSYLtVANlA RAIIiKOAD BC'Ut.DUL-fn effect from Het. y, Tratnt taivi LAtTCAem ana leave and er. rive at fhlladelphla aa fellows : WKSTWABD. racue Kxpreett..,., ewi Kznreaat. ...... Philadelphia. Lancaster ;aeP. ni. 4.30a. in. 4:30 a.m. 7SV10. tn. i:i. m 6: a. m 6)a Ui 9-Slm. ui 0:36 a. ni :50a..m. 9-M. m iSO p. in 110 p. tn 2:50 p. m 5:30 p. m 7:40 p. m 7fSO n ni Way Passenger U all tralnvlaMt, Jey I su. V IU 'XT 1)f.., Niagara Kzpreaa.... Hanover Accetn rest Ltnct via Columbia 7:40a. m. via Columbia il.NlfA m "rederlck Accem.... la Columbia e-anraaier Accem.. Uarrlsbunr Accem. via u Jey Colombia Accem..,. kid p. in. 4:40 p.m. 6:80 p.m. 9:20 p.m. lave Lancaster. 1:911. m. B.-efia. m. 8:10 a. m. 8-55 a. m. ms. m. 11:10 a. m. 12.Mp.in. 2:05 p.m. Bsep. m. aniseurg Kzpreu Western Azpreas.., KASTWABD. Phlla. Kzpruse rait Line Ilanisbnrir Iinnua 11:10 p m arrive rniu. 4 la. ui. B:A- m IftMK ,n Lancaster Accem.... MlMtlm e-oiumeia accem..., Atlantic Express). .. Seashore Kzpresa..., Philadelphia Accem Sunday Stall.. . t'av Kinross 1 11:45 a. ui. 1: p. m 3:15 p. 10 6:00 p. in. 6:45 p. ui 6:50 p. tn Harrlsliurg Aocem.. t:ta p. m 6:45 p. m :te p. in. b-- ... .MII. WAAJVAAAUU UAIIV, n 8nnday the Mall train west runt by wa et Celnmbla. J. B. WOOD, Uenaral Passonger Agent. CHAS.K.I'Uuh.Uener- Manager. IV'ha nnlw Ivuln. S.,m. w.. i.,i UHOVKR1K8. JVKRY FAM11.Y SHOULD USE CABBABD'3 MILD CUBED UAM. The V. Schiiinaker Jsew Precess Fleur pre neunced the host ever placed upon them tr- We make tpeclalUes of FINB TBAi.am VholceULD JAVA and MOCUAUOrrBKB. The best Kic ceiree In the city. All we ask is a til erder. oke. W1ANT, .,- . .. Np. lis West King Btreeu moods delivered. TBURSK'S. TABLE FRUITS. lereljn nnd Demestic. We would Call At tention te our California- Eviperaltil Aprieets aid Peicbes. Kgg end DatnHen Plums. Bnlslrrs, entrants. Prunes, rrencb Prunes of all sizes. Pitted Cherrltis, Dried BNckbonles, rigs, Valencia Balslns, iTunillas, Ktc. Canned Goods I Canned Goods I We have loe many, and are still selling f if enns Feil's Cern fur 2ie. Three quart cm. fell's Toinstees for 25c. String Uesns, thre cans, 25c uheip feas. three cans for 25e. Flne 'eas. and canned Cnru A full Hue el the best tirocerles at Lewest I'r.eej. BURSK'S! NO. 17 EA3T KING STREET LANCASTKH. PA. B AKGAINH FOR THE NEXT HI.V DAYS I REIST'S BIO BARGAINS IN PUKE SPICES FOR SIX DAYS ONLY ! innauien 8 lbs for f 100 Cleves 4 ft i for 1(0 Allspice S ftsler HO Ginger 11 fcster 100 Mace IX as for loe Nutmexs 1M fas for 1 10 Pepper IX u. for 1 (-0 Baking beda 20 Its for l.en Cream et Turtur 3 Us for 1 00 Ci-yennu Pepper 5 is ter 1(0 BEAR IN MIND lhateurHI..lAY IIABQAIN BALVs will go en. whether we leso uier.ey or make men- , anil ciireuleiis competitors, who talk or els e untln our 111(1 BAKU AINS, are at liberty t dn se nt all times. They have our b..( wllif8. 51 y success alteud them. FOR RE51NT. 1 nly ene el the thtee homes eirered Istt vii t-k lull-a'lwo-stery Hrtck, at Ili per month; ui e. Large, Commodious Knnui nn beennd rliiuriK i.urtterti Building, with Bleam lltat and Hater. FOR 6ALB. Seven Dwelling Hemes, with and without Ci uvuiiieiiers. In QuslruDle putts el the cliy, n 1 easy terms. J. FRANK HEIST, WHOI.KSALK AND BETAIL 1U0UU, Northeast Carrier ft est Kltt; aid l'rlur Ntrret. LANCASTKU PA, -TJf nben.i and Fisxi Unlivery awYOLSu. OIOYOMCS, TRIOYOLKS, TANDK.M.-. COLUMBIA BicycluB, Tricycles, TandumB. DUKAULK, B1UPLK. QUAUANTXKDHiaUKBTtiKADt:, 1LLUSTUATKDOATALOUUK rUK(. POPE MF'G. CO, 79 FUANKLIN ST., BOSTON. -UANCU IIOUSKS-u Warren flL, New Yerk : 291 Wabash Ave.. uhlmKe, rerBaiebyJpUH8.MUS3KK,Na a North Street, Columbia. auj-lyQeea